Decimals
Up to now, every number you wrote was a whole number — 1, 7, 84, 3 472. In Year 4 you meet decimals, which let you write numbers between the whole numbers.
A new place to the right
In a whole number, the rightmost digit is the ones. Decimals add new places to the right of a point: tenths, hundredths and (later) thousandths.
| Hundreds | Tens | Ones | . | Tenths | Hundredths |
| 0 | 0 | 3 | . | 4 | 7 |
So 3.47 means three ones, four tenths and seven hundredths.
The little dot is the decimal point. In many European countries (including SK, CS, DE, ES) people write a comma instead — for example 3,47. The maths is identical.
What a tenth is
Take 1 whole. Split it into ten equal parts. Each part is one tenth, written as 0.1.
0.1 =
0.2 =
…
0.9 =
1.0 = = one whole
You can see the tenths on a number line: ten equal jumps from 0 to 1.
What a hundredth is
Now split one tenth into ten equal parts. Each part is one hundredth, written as 0.01.
0.01 =
0.10 = = = 0.1
0.47 =
It takes a hundred hundredths to make one whole.
Where decimals show up in real life
- Money. £3.47 means 3 pounds and 47 hundredths of a pound (47 pence).
- Length. 1.75 m is a metre and 75 hundredths of a metre.
- Temperature. 36.6 °C is 36 degrees and 6 tenths.
- Sports. A runner's 100 m time of 12.04 seconds is 12 seconds and 4 hundredths.
What you'll learn
- Tenths, hundredths and place value — read any decimal carefully
- Decimals on a number line — see where they sit
- Comparing decimals — which is bigger?
- Decimals as fractions — the bridge to fractions
- For parents — tips for grown-ups
Try it out
- 🔢 Decimal place value — which digit is in the tenths or hundredths place?
- 📏 Decimal on a number line — read a tenth from a 0..1 line
- ⚖️ Compare decimals — pick <, > or =
- 🔄 Decimal ↔ fraction